Film Review
Gérard Blain was and remains a paradox. A darling of the
French New Wave, he could, had he chosen it, been one of the biggest
stars of his generation. But acting was never something that he
felt entirely comfortable with. Offered a Hollywood contract, he
turned it down and stayed in Europe, accepting roles in low budget
French and Italian films, most of which are completely forgotten
today. Despite the early promise he showed in his first major
roles, in Julien Duvivier's
Voici le temps des assassins
(1956) and Claude Chabrol's
Le Beau Serge (1958), Blain's
heart was never in acting. What he longed for was to be able to
direct his own films, and after a long and difficult struggle he
finally had the opportunity to do just that. But he didn't play
it safe,
bien au contraire....
Typical of his rebellious and uncompromising temperament, Blain's first
film as a director was daring to the point of provocation.
Les Amis was not only
groundbreaking because it portrayed a same sex relationship in a
sympathetic way, it also risked being banned by the censor on account
of the fact that the relationship in question involved a middle-aged
man and a boy of sixteen. (At the time, the age of consent was
21.) In a similar vein to Blain's subsequent
Un enfant dans la foule (1976)
(which can be seen as a prequel to this film),
Les Amis has an obvious
autobiographical component. Like the boy featured in the film,
Blain was abandoned in early childhood by his father, left school at
13, had aspirations of a life as an actor and willingly entered into
relationships with older men when he was a teenager. The film may
have been controversial but it earned its director considerable
critical acclaim. François Truffaut was effusive in his
praise for it and it won the Golden Leopard for Best First Work at the
Locarno International Film Festival in 1971. But, in common with
all of Blain's subsequent work, the film had difficulty finding a
distributor and was not a commercial success.
As a filmmaker, Blain's strongest influences were his heroes Robert
Bresson and Carl Dreyer. Like Bresson, Blain preferred
non-professional actors whom he could 'mould' rather than established
actors. The deceptive simplicity of Bresson and Dreyer's films is
reflected in Blain's own work, which, as a consequence, possesses an
astonishing purity and veracity. (Watching a Gérard Blain
film is always a cathartic experience, and you genuinely do feel
cleansed afterwards.) Inspired by the minimalism of
Bresson's late period films, Blain favoured long static shots with a
pared back composition, often with strong colours and minimal motion
within the shot. The most obvious Bressonian touch in
Les Amis is the sequence depicting
Philippe's death. The camera remains focussed on the exit to a
service station after Philippe drives off in his car.
We then hear the sound of a car crash and realise that Philippe is
gone. If Blain had shown us the car crash, it
could never have had such a powerful impact.
Surprisingly, given that he had a reputation as a homophobe in later
years, Blain makes no moral judgement on Paul's relationship with
Philippe. It is clearly one based on mutual exploitation but
there is also something much deeper - each has a profound need for
emotional support which the other is able to supply. Neglected by
his own family, Paul's transition to adulthood would be unbearable
without the attention and material help that Philippe provides him
with; in return, Philippe takes from Paul the respect and tenderness
that his wife appears unable or unwilling to give him. From what
Blain shows us, we have very little reason to think they are
lovers. Theirs is more a father-son or mentor-student
relationship, the older generation passing on the baton to the
younger. Whether Philippe and Paul share the same bed is
irrelevant. Blain's primary interest is in showing us how
essential adult companionship is for a teenager during the process of
growing up. Robbed, as he was, of a committed father, the
adolescent is bound to look for a substitute. Through their
incredibly subtle, intensely involving performances, Yann Favre and
Philippe March give Blain's film a heartbreaking reality that evokes
not only the fragility of adolescence but also the exquisite beauty of
friendship, the only thing in life that is more tragic than love.
© James Travers 2015
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Next Gérard Blain film:
Un enfant dans la foule (1976)